SOME COMMON
ABNORMALITIES IN PERIPHERAL BLOOD SMEAR EXAMINATION
Anisocytosis
Variation in the size of RBC seen in Fe deficiency anemia, megaloblastic anemia, and sideroblastic anemia Poikilocytosis
Variation in the shape of RBC, seen in Fe deficiency anemia, thalassemia, and sideroblastic anemia.
Microcytosis
RBC size less than normal (< 75 fL), seen in Fe deficiency anemia, thalassemia, and sideroblastic anemia
Variation in the size of RBC seen in Fe deficiency anemia, megaloblastic anemia, and sideroblastic anemia Poikilocytosis
Variation in the shape of RBC, seen in Fe deficiency anemia, thalassemia, and sideroblastic anemia.
Microcytosis
RBC size less than normal (< 75 fL), seen in Fe deficiency anemia, thalassemia, and sideroblastic anemia
Macrocytosis
size of RBC> 100 fL seen in vitamin B12 and also folic acid deficiency
size of RBC> 100 fL seen in vitamin B12 and also folic acid deficiency
Hypochromia
RBC with less Hb, the increased central pallor is seen in Iron deficiency anemia, thalassemia, sideroblastic anemia
Basophilic stippling or punctate basophilia
RBC with less Hb, the increased central pallor is seen in Iron deficiency anemia, thalassemia, sideroblastic anemia
Basophilic stippling or punctate basophilia
Presence of
scattered deep blue dots in the cytoplasm of RBC with Romanowsky staining, seen
in pathologically damaged young red cells, severe anemia β thalassemia, and
chronic lead poisoning.
Target
cells—Flat red cells with a central mass of Hb (dense area) surrounded by a
ring of pallor (pale area) and an outer ring of Hb (dense area), seen in
chronic liver diseases, hyposplenism, and hemoglobinopathies.
Howell-Jolly
bodies—seen in non-functioning or absent spleen and
megaloblastic anemia.
Heinz’s bodies
(Ehrlich’s bodies)—formed from denatured, aggregated hemoglobin,
seen in thalassemia, hemolytic anemia due to G6PD deficiency, asplenia, and
chronic liver disase.
Burn cells—RBC showing regularly placed spicules,
seen in uremia.
Schistocytes—they
are fragmented RBCs seen in intravascular bemolysis.
Spherocytes—small, densely packed
RBCs with loss of central pallor, seen in hereditary spherocytosis and
immunohemolytic anemias